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Chapter%2024%20%20Electric%20Potential

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Chapter 24 Electric Potential Key contents Conservative force and potential energy Potential energy and potential Potential due to different charge distribution – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter%2024%20%20Electric%20Potential


1
Chapter 24 Electric Potential
Key contents Conservative force and potential
energy Potential energy and potential Potential
due to different charge distribution Field and
potential (versus force and potential
energy) Conductors
2
24.2 Electric Potential Energy
The electric force is found to be a conservative
force.
When an electrostatic force acts between two or
more charged particles within a system of
particles, we can assign an electric potential
energy U to the system. If the system changes its
configuration from an initial state i to a
different final state f, the electrostatic force
does work W on the particles. If the resulting
change is DU, then As with other conservative
forces, the work done by the electrostatic force
is path independent. Usually the reference
configuration of a system of charged particles is
taken to be that in which the particles are all
infinitely separated from one another. The
corresponding reference potential energy is
usually set be zero. Therefore,
Review Chapter 8
3
Example, Work and potential energy in an electric
field
4
24.3 Electric Potential
5
24.3 Electric Potential Units
This unit of volt allows us to adopt a more
conventional unit for the electric field, E,
which is expressed in newtons per coulomb. We
can now define an energy unit that is a
convenient one for energy measurements in the
atomic/subatomic domain One electron-volt (eV)
is the energy equal to the work required to move
a single elementary charge e, such as that of the
electron or the proton, through a potential
difference of exactly one volt. The magnitude of
this work is qDV, and
6
24.4 Equipotential Surfaces
Adjacent points that have the same electric
potential form an equipotential surface, which
can be either an imaginary surface or a real,
physical surface. No net work W is done on a
charged particle by an electric field when the
particle moves between two points i and f on the
same equipotential surface.
Fig. 24-2 Portions of four equipotential surfaces
at electric potentials V1100 V, V280 V,V3 60
V, and V4 40 V. Four paths along which a test
charge may move are shown. Two electric field
lines are also indicated.
7
24.4 Equipotential Surfaces
Fig. 24-3 Electric field lines (purple) and cross
sections of equipotential surfaces (gold) for (a)
a uniform electric field, (b) the field due to a
point charge, and (c) the field due to an
electric dipole.
8
24.5 Calculating the Potential from the Field
If we set potential Vi 0, then
9
Example, Finding the Potential change from the
Electric Field
10
Example, Finding the Potential change from the
Electric Field
11
24.6 Potential Due to a Point Charge
A positively charged particle produces a positive
electric potential. A negatively charged particle
produces a negative electric potential.
12
24.7 Potential Due to a Group of Point Charges
The net potential at a point due to a group of
point charges can be found with the help of the
superposition principle. First the individual
potential resulting from each charge is
considered at the given point. Then we sum the
potentials. For n charges, the net potential is
13
Example, Net Potential of Several Charged
Particles
14
Example, Potential is not a Vector
15
24.8 Potential Due to an Electric Dipole
16
24.8 Induced Dipole Moment
Fig. 24-11 (a) An atom, showing the positively
charged nucleus (green) and the negatively
charged electrons (gold shading).The centers of
positive and negative charge coincide. (b) If the
atom is placed in an external electric field
E, the electron orbits are distorted so that the
centers of positive and negative charge no longer
coincide. An induced dipole moment p appears. The
distortion is greatly exaggerated here.
17
24.9 Potential Due to a Continuous Charge
Distribution Line of Charge
18
24.9 Potential Due to a Continuous Charge
Distribution Charged Disk
19
24.10 Calculating the Field from the Potential
20
Example, Finding the Field from the Potential
21
Example, Potential Energy of a System of Three
Charged Particles
22
Example, Conservation of Mechanical Energy with
Electric Potential Energy
23
24.12 Potential of a Charged, Isolated Conductor
24
24.12 Isolated Conductor in an External Electric
Field
If an isolated conductor is placed in an external
electric field, all points of the conductor still
come to a single potential regardless of whether
the conductor has an excess charge. The free
conduction electrons distribute themselves on the
surface in such a way that the electric field
they produce at interior points cancels the
external electric field that would otherwise be
there. Furthermore, the electron distribution
causes the net electric field at all points on
the surface to be perpendicular to the surface.
If the conductor in Fig. 24-20 could be somehow
removed, leaving the surface charges frozen in
place, the internal and external electric field
would remain absolutely unchanged.
Note the stronger field near sharper tips of
the conductor.
25
24.12 Spark Discharge from a Charged Conductor
On nonspherical conductors, a surface charge does
not distribute itself uniformly over the surface
of the conductor. At sharp points or edges, the
surface charge densityand thus the external
electric field, may reach very high values. The
air around such sharp points or edges may become
ionized, producing the corona discharge that
golfers and mountaineers see on the tips of
bushes, golf clubs, and rock hammers when
thunderstorms threaten. Such corona discharges
are often the precursors of lightning strikes. In
such circumstances, it is wise to enclose
yourself in a cavity inside a conducting shell,
where the electric field is guaranteed to be
zero. A car (unless it is a convertible or made
with a plastic body) is almost ideal
26
Homework Problems 8, 20, 29, 48, 60
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